Wed, 20 Feb 2019 05:13:13 +1100WeeblyWed, 06 Feb 2019 02:58:51 GMThttp://www.fundraisingresearch.com.au/news/another-landmark-year-for-australian-philanthropy​2018 – another landmark year in Australian philanthropy2018 was another landmark year for Australian philanthropy, continuing the transformation that we have seen in the Australian giving landscape over the last half-dozen years.

The biggest philanthropic news came at the end of the year - the loss of Stan Perron, already an extraordinarily important donor in WA, will not mean the end of his philanthropic legacy, with the bulk of his $4 billion fortune going to his foundation.

This bequest will make a big difference in several ways. Firstly, from a giving perspective it means we now have another very large foundation on a similar scale to the $4bn+ Paul Ramsay Foundation. Secondly, of the three Australians who have now given or pledged over $1bn (Paul Ramsay, Andrew Forrest, and Stan Perron), two are from WA - a rebalancing of philanthropy's centre of gravity away from the eastern states.

The two biggest gift announcements of the year were both for $100m:• Judith Neilson announced a $100m gift to support the Judith Neilson Institute for Journalism and Ideas.• Andrew and Nicola Forrest's Minderoo Foundation announced a $100m commitment to their Minderoo Ocean Research (MOR) Initiative, with a range of partner organisations.

Early in 2019, we also saw Australia's biggest ever fundraising campaign meet its target, as the University of Sydney announced it had reached its $1 billion objective, an unprecedented landmark in Australian philanthropy.

Big gifts in higher education in 2018 included:• $30m to LaTrobe University from an anonymous donor, helping the University to reach its $50m campaign goal, and set a new target of $100m• $30m to the University of Melbourne from Jane Hansen and Paul Little• $16.4m from the Paul Ramsay Foundation to the University of Newcastle• $13.5m from Andrew and Paula Liveris to the University of Queensland• $10m from Marcus Blackmore and Caroline Furlong to Southern Cross University• $10m from Len and Margarete Ainsworth to Western Sydney University• $10m from the Kinghorn Foundation to the Australian-American Fulbright Commission to support Fulbright Future Scholarships.

In other higher education news, Monash University launched its largest ever fundraising campaign, with a target of $500m.

The Ramsay Centre for Western Civilisation was much in the news - while ANU withdrew mid-year from negotiations to establish a Ramsay-funded degree in Western Civilisation Studies, the University of Wollongong reached an agreement to establish a degree, worth a reported $50m in funding over eight years.

The Ramsay Foundation itself announced a major change with the appointment of a new CEO, Professor Glyn Davis, taking over from inaugural CEO Simon Freeman.

In the arts, we saw another landmark project meet its target as the Art Gallery of NSW successfully concluded the capital campaign for its Sydney Modern project, exceeding its $100m target, and foreshadowing an intended art acquisition campaign to be launched in 2019.

With one major arts project coming to fruition, another was being announced, with Victorian premier Daniel Andrews signalling a major redevelopment of Melbourne's arts precinct, with ambitious philanthropic support needed to see the project through.

In the health sector, big gifts included:• The Paul Ramsay Foundation's gift of $11.33m to the Burnet Institute's Eliminate Hepatitis C Australia Partnership• The late Geoffrey Carrick's bequest of $9.85m to the Royal Flying Doctor Service and Children's Hospital Foundation• A $5m gift by Carl and Wendy Dowd to the Florey Institute, matched by another $5m from Florey Chairman Harold Mitchell• $2.5m from Neil Balnaves and the Balnaves Foundation to the Menzies School of Health Research's Hearing for Learning initiative

In sport, Hawthorn FC major donor Geoff Harris made a lead gift of $10m in support of the club's move to Dingley.

Finally, 2018 was notable not just for the financial contributions made by Australia's philanthropists, but also by their involvement in public advocacy. Perpetual's Caitriona Fay summed up 2018 as 'the year philanthropy fought for democracy.' And Philanthropy Australia's Sarah Wickham noted the support given by The Myer Foundation, The Snow Foundation, The Fay Fuller Foundation and The Wyatt Trust to the Australian Council of Social Services (ACOSS) Raise the Rate Campaign to reduce poverty in Australia.​In total, we counted more than 80 publicly announced gifts of between $1m and $100m in Australia last year, and FR&C's updated list of Australian $1m+ donors can be found here.When we started this list in 2011, there were 100 $1m+ donors, and Australia's biggest giver was an Irish-American, Chuck Feeney (still near the top with US$368m in Australian giving).That list now contains 350 donors, two of whom have established foundations with assets in the billions, and two more who have pledged to give away at least half their wealth.Expect more changes in the years ahead!]]>Mon, 25 Jun 2018 16:41:31 GMThttp://www.fundraisingresearch.com.au/news/were-now-able-to-offer-data-screening-in-new-zealandHappy to announce that we have added a screening database for New Zealand not for profits to our range of services. We've tested it with organisations in education and charity sectors with good results. If you're interested in screening your NZ names, please get in touch!]]>Tue, 13 Feb 2018 00:15:50 GMThttp://www.fundraisingresearch.com.au/news/2017-a-phenomenal-year-for-major-giftsAustralian philanthropy has seen big changes in the past five years. 2013 was a record year for Australian giving, with over 50 $1m+ gifts made publicly for the first time, the record for Australia's biggest donation being broken three times, and Andrew and Nicola Forrest becoming the first Australians to join the Giving Pledge, publicly promising to give away at least half of their wealth.

Since then, we've seen major philanthropy continue to grow in Australia, and 2017 was no exception. Here are some of the big gift announcements from last year:

Andrew and Nicola Forrest pledged to give $400m to six priority areas – cancer, modern slavery, creating parity, early childhood, research, and communities. The Forrests also helped UWA to close its $400m campaign with a $65m gift, and gave $10m to support improved outcomes for brain cancer patients.

Joining the Forrests as a Giving Pledge signatory in 2017 was billionaire philanthropist Len Ainsworth.

Australia's richest foundation, the Paul Ramsay Foundation, built on its number one position in last year's AFR Philanthropy 50 by announcing a number of gifts, including a reported $30m per annum to support the Ramsay Centre for Western Civilisation, $24.5m to the Murdoch Children's Research Institute for their Generation V longitudinal study, and $13m to Telethon Kids Institute for their ORIGINS project.

The Ian Potter Foundation announced multiple new major grant initiatives including $5m towards the University of Tasmania's Creative Industry and Performing Arts (CIPA) project, $4m towards the Ian Potter Southbank Centre for the Melbourne Conservatorium of Music, and multi-million dollar grants to HammondCare, Clontarf Foundation, Guide Dogs Victoria, ANU, Hope Street Youth and Family Services, Seed Foundation, the Australian Ballet, Homes4Homes, and Griffith University.

The Art Gallery of NSW announced it had reached $88m in philanthropic support for its Sydney Modern project including a $20m gift from Isaac and Susan Wakil, and gifts of $5m or more from the Ainsworth family, the Lowy Family, Kerr Neilson, Mark Nelson and Gretel Packer.

There were several other gifts over $5m:

Alibaba founder Jack Ma announced a $26.4m gift to the University of Newcastle to fund the Ma & Morley Scholarship Program.

Flight Centre CEO Graham Turner and his family foundation announced an $18.5m gift to the University of Queensland in support of a wildlife conservation and breeding project.

Marcus Blackmore and his company announced a joint $10m gift to the National Institute for Complementary Medicine.

The State Library of Victoria received $8m from John and Miriam Wylie, and another $3m from Allan and Maria Myers, towards their capital refurbishment program.

Arts philanthropist Judith Neilson gave $6m to fund a Chair in Contemporary Art at UNSW.

Christine and Bruce Wilson gave $5.5m to fund the Christine and Bruce Wilson Centre for Lymphoma Genomics.

Hunter Medical Research Institute received an anonymous $5.2m gift to improve access to high quality health care for vulnerable and remote communities across NSW.

Pamela Galli gave $5m to establish the Lorenzo and Pamela Galli Chair in Medical Biology at the University of Melbourne and the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute.

The Brazil family gave $5m to the University of Queensland in support of clinical collaboration in stroke and motor neurone disease research.

Peter and Ruth McMullin's donation to fund the Peter McMullin Centre on Statelessness at the University of Melbourne.

Qantas CEO Alan Joyce's $1m donation in support of marriage equality.

A $3.75m gift by Hong Kong's Li Ka Shing, to support precision oncology research at the University of Melbourne Centre for Cancer Research and the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre. Mr Li is Hong Kong's richest man, and his Li Ka Shing Foundation has given away over US$2.6bn.

FR&C's list of Australian $1m+ donors now features twelve $100m+ donors, seven $50m+ donors, 62 donors with known or estimated giving of $10m+, and another 55 with known giving of $5m+. The total list stands at 334 and can be found here.​]]>Tue, 09 Jan 2018 04:45:17 GMThttp://www.fundraisingresearch.com.au/news/january-08th-2018Here's How to Fine Tune Your Major Gifts Program...

....is the heading of a very kind article that Roewen Wishart wrote about our book last year, published in Fundraising & Philanthropy magazine

Roewen Wishart explores the ins and outs of starting/refocusing major gift fundraising and finding essential linkages so you can fine-tune your major gifts program.Australian major gifts and capital fundraising will benefit for years from the publication of Understanding Major Donors: A Guide to Prospect Research for Australian Fundraisers by Charlotte Grimshaw, Molly Masiello and Conor McCarthy.

Fundraising managers and major gifts specialists face the challenge of how use the information generated by prospect research and apply it to decision-making, priority setting and planning. Here are two vexed questions, and some answers.Choosing where to start or how to refocus Fundraisers commonly face one of two problems. One is: how to start a major gifts program with an established mass donor and/or ‘founding donors’ base.A converse is: how to refocus a major gifts program that has become swamped with too many prospects and staff time spent on activity that doesn’t generate enough ‘hot prospects’.Major gifts staff are trained to look for potential and to understand the need for cultivation steps to build donor engagement. It’s easy therefore to ‘hang on too long’, hoping that a donor’s or prospect’s engagement can be built.In both these cases, a new (or revisited) method of linkage, ability and interest scoring is a good place to start. The method covered in chapter four is a good practical guide. It suggests a five-point scale for each of the three criteria (effectively from ‘nil or nothing known’ to ‘very strong’). And it makes the important point that financial ability warrants extra weight; a donor with relatively weak demonstrated linkage and interest but very large giving ability warrants more attention than another donor with the same ‘total score’ but only moderate ability.I have found two important additional factors for organisations both large and small. First, the LAI score needs to only be sufficient to identify the relatively strong and relatively weak. If current resources allow, for example, one full-equivalent major gifts officer, my observation is that about 80 donors and prospects is about the maximum portfolio size in which each can receive the attention warranted. (This can be more in some organisations which can extensively support major gifts officers with prospect research and administrative back-up.)The LAI scoring process usually starts with an apparent pool of ‘unqualified prospects’ (for example, anyone who gave $500 in the past three years, excluding peer-to-peer sponsors). If there are 150 unqualified prospects, a LAI scoring with just 0 to 2 for each criterion may be enough to select 80. But it there are 500, a more ‘finely graduated’ scoring from 0 to 5 makes sense.The point is that more time and judgement is needed when the graduations of the scoring are more specific. It is best to do this stage briskly, and get on with finding linkages and testing personal cultivationThe second factor is the need to establish a regular review of prospects in a portfolio. Sometimes no personal, quality cultivation step is possible – due to a donor’s preference for privacy, busyness, low interest or absence of personal linkage. If this is unchanged after six months and several different attempts, it might be time to cease personal cultivation and try new possible prospects.Note for context here that LAI rating is most relevant to major gifts programs that are ‘staff driven’, that is, where all three criteria are necessary to ‘get off square one’.In case of capital and capacity campaigns that are more ‘volunteer advocate’ driven, interest becomes less important as an initial filter, and personal linkage of those advocates and ability to make a big gift are the starting point. Usually, big gifts will only result where genuine interest is subsequently built by cultivation. But at the start, linkage and ability can be enough.

Finding linkagesOften the single longest delay factor in approaching top prospects (even a charity’s own donors) is getting face to face. Often, the donors with the biggest ability to give are the busiest and hardest to reach. Chapter 8 gives good guidance. Note: LinkedIn continues to grow in value for this purpose, although don’t rely on your own LinkedIn account to find connections to a prospect. LinkedIn currently only shows mutual connections to a prospect who is ‘second level connected’ to you.Well-prepared phone technique can help get that first meeting. A solo major gifts officer in an organisation with no prior major gifts positions recently arranged a meeting with a BRW 200 individual who had only ever signed an online petition for the organisation.This happened by applying prospect research that identified a location of the charity’s activities of close interest to the donor, and a few well selected questions about how the donor’s business activities might overlap with the charity’s.But most of the time, it’s personal linkage that can get you face to face when the usual offerings (invitations to tours, board cocktails etc) don’t work by themselves. The tours and thank-you events still work (to motivate, appreciate, affiliate) but it’s a personal invitation by a person of influence that will increase the acceptance rate.An interesting side note here is that several experienced UK and Canadian fundraisers have commented on how different Australia is – donors simply not giving an RSVP or accepting then not coming with no notification, is very frequent by comparison.Which linkages found by prospect research are most effective?

Longer personal connections beyond business and professional relationships are clearly effective, although less likely to be found via research of published information. Conversely, don’t assume that people who are both on the same board necessarily know each other well, particularly for professional non-executive directors.

Consider the social and business obligations involved. For example, professional advisors and suppliers to a business may need to carefully ration the requests they make of people who are their clients and customers. But clients and customers will find it easier to invite their advisors and suppliers.

Pay attention to residential location. Often, people who can be influential for your organisation will have a network around their home that is unrelated to their business or profession. This applies when doing ‘peer screening’ with your board members and ‘inner circle’. You can ensure that the prospect names they screen include those nearby. Of course, research won’t always find private addresses.

For professionals interested in more, the Association of Professional Researchers for Advancement (APRA) has a newly formed Australian chapter (the first outside North America). Email enquiries to stephen.rowe@anu.edu.au. There’s also the APRA Australia LinkedIn group, which has plenty of interesting and specific discussion.Charlotte Grimshaw, Molly Masiello and Conor McCarthy’s Understanding Major Donors: A Guide to Prospect Research for Australian Fundraisers is priced at $30 and available from fundraisingresearch.com.au.Roewen WishartRoewen Wishart CFRE is Director of Xponential and has 25 years’ experience in fundraising. His specialties are fundraising strategy, major gifts and capital/endowment campaigns, gifts in wills, ethics and boards in fundraising.

]]>Sun, 01 Oct 2017 16:14:43 GMThttp://www.fundraisingresearch.com.au/news/capgemini-world-wealth-report-2017Capgemini have published their annual World Wealth report for 2017, reporting on numbers in high net worth individuals around the world, their asset allocations and estimated worth. Australian numbers continue to grow, although not as spectacularly as in some recent years. You can review the stats and download a copy of the report from their website here]]>Tue, 26 Sep 2017 14:37:16 GMThttp://www.fundraisingresearch.com.au/news/survey-shows-growth-in-arts-philanthropy

The Australian Major Performing Arts Group has released the results of its annual philanthropy survey, showing that income from donations, corporate sponsorship, and fundraising to our major performing arts companies grew by 15.2 per cent in 2016.

The survey showed revenue from these private streams grew by $12.6 million to a total of $95.7 million from 2015 to 16. It reveals a huge increase in philanthropy and corporate sponsorship over the last 15 years, more than tripling from its 2001 figure of $30.3 million.

]]>Wed, 03 May 2017 08:31:12 GMThttp://www.fundraisingresearch.com.au/news/may-03rd-2017This week the Australian Financial Review published its 'Philanthropy 50', Australia's top individual givers in 2016, compiled by John McLeod: you can find the list and accompanying articles here

]]>Tue, 07 Mar 2017 01:17:46 GMThttp://www.fundraisingresearch.com.au/news/privacy-and-prospect-research-the-uk-debate-and-recent-developmentsWe’ve heard a lot recently from the UK about the discussion on privacy with regard to prospect research, so we thought it might be useful to summarise a few points and draw together some relevant web links.

The UK Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) fined two charities in December for data protection breaches. Both charities paid the fines while publicly disagreeing with the ICO’s assessments. The way these fines have been reported in some quarters have implied that activities such as data screening, or appending phone numbers to donor records, are not permitted under UK legislation, which is not the case. The key issues were about transparency to donors, and about whether these activities came within the definition of the data holder’s ‘legitimate interest’ and so constituted ‘fair processing.’ The ICO further outlined its position on these issues at a conference last month, and is considering possible penalties for another eleven UK charities.

Charities in the UK have expressed concern about the judgmental tone of remarks made by the ICO representative about charities’ practices which the charities felt were inappropriate and misleading and which lead to headlines like this “The UK Information Commissioner’s office (ICO) has slammed a number of big-name charities, including the RSPCA and the British Heart Foundation, for 'wealth screening' donors. “

How much of this debate is relevant for us here in Australia?As in Australia, the UK data protection laws require that data holders inform their data subjects if they intend to append to their records information provided by third party suppliers. If you look at your telco supplier’s privacy agreement you will probably find a statement like this: We may also collect personal information from other companies that are able to disclose it to us, if it's not practical to collect it from you. For example, we buy or obtain personal information from trusted sources to help us identify people who might be interested in hearing about our products. (Optus privacy statement).

]]>Tue, 28 Jun 2016 02:14:03 GMThttp://www.fundraisingresearch.com.au/news/2016-world-wealth-report-published The 2016 World Wealth Report from Cap Gemini is out and available for download here. Cap Gemini report that Asia-Pacific recorded robust HNWI population and wealth growth rates (9.4% and 9.9%, respectively), highest across the globe, and edged past North America to become the region with the highest HNWI wealth of $ 17.4 trillion. The population of HNWIs in Australia increased from 226k in 2014 to 234.4k in 2015]]>Thu, 23 Jun 2016 07:56:07 GMThttp://www.fundraisingresearch.com.au/news/more-data-and-a-new-frc-serviceFind the wealth (and the PAFs) already in your databaseWe're constantly adding new names and data to our Wealthscan screening database: it now numbers nearly 45,000 prominent and wealthy Australians including many PAF trustees. We are also now including where available the latest information on PAF assets as well, so if you want to find out which PAF trustees are already in your database, and how much money that fund contains, consider a Wealthscan screening.

New service - Prospect RatingConstraints on time and resources make it vital to be able to prioritise your prospects once you have identified them; with this new service FR&C will assess the linkage, interest, and financial ability of the people in your prospect pool, enabling you to set priorities effectively. Contact us for more information]]>